
Carlos Pesudo is GlogauAIR resident from October 2025 to March 2026. (Q4)
Carlos is a visual artist from Spain, currently based in Madrid. His work explores ambiguity and unease, with images that linger on an undefined threshold between abstraction and figuration. Carlos works intuitively, treating the canvas as an unknown space. The scenes that emerge—dynamic and theatrical—feel both strange and familiar, and reflect his fascination with certain forms in nature, particularly those that strike him as violent or illogical.
Meet the Artist
Can you tell me a bit about yourself and what you’re working on during your residency at GlogauAIR?
I was always interested in art, maybe because my grandfather was a painter. When I was seven years old, he taught me how to work with oil paint. So I started painting really young. The studio where I used to work in my hometown is where he used to paint. It’s kind of a magical place, where everything started for me.

Right now, I’m nearing the end of changing my artistic process. Something interesting happened recently, while preparing my last solo show, and now I want to explore it. My first idea was about going for something more purely abstract. But in the end I feel I’m being more precise with forms and volumes, to be more precise on the ambiguity. That’s a paradox, actually; being more precise with ambiguity. For example, I was thinking about swans. I have this thing with the swans. The swans are somehow connected with my first solo show in Madrid that was all about a rubber duck I found randomly in Berlin a long time ago, floating above the canal. Last year when I was visiting Berlin, I spent one afternoon in the canal drawing the swans. And then I thought, that only when you are watching and drawing them, you realize how weird they are with the movements. How they look, how they change. Sometimes you don’t even know what you are looking at, but you just know it’s a swan. I’m interested in this point, about perception. But I will never represent a swan.

In your most recent works, your colors are uniform and distinct. What is your process in choosing color?
My recent paintings from my last show were these kinds of color studies from the sea. Also in my video work, there is this abstract color sequence. I went inside with my camera and took in the colors.
Normally I don’t question the color. Why did I choose that color? Because the colors are, they choose me. Colors contain so much emotional weight. At this point, it’s not something rational in my head, I just go. Sometimes if I establish some rules for using those colors, in the end, I will probably change it.

You use the words violent, illogical and strange alongside your relationship to the natural world. Are you referring to the nature of humans or non-humans when you talk about the natural world?
For those adjectives, it’s always in terms of image; this violence of the image, the illogical, is probably the opposite of humans. But it can also have these relations to humans. For example, in dance, there’s this weird movement a body has. When things look abnormal, maybe when it’s an image of something we don’t know, it becomes weird and then it’s a distortion of something.
It’s also about this kind of inspiration I have from nature. When I was using this high magnifying lens-for example, I just looked at some insects, and found images which were really crazy. But they are mostly crazy because they don’t actually belong to our world. They don’t belong to our dimension, the human dimension. I mean, we coexist with all these images. They are surrounding us all the time. But they’re still not taking part in our usual imagery of the world.
Watching these kinds of images from nature is sometimes really violent for me. And I guess they connect with my abstract inner world. So when I work with abstraction, all these things that I see, show up in my paintings. They’re wandering in my subconscious and appear.

Interview Shay Rutkowski (@sruutrut)
Photos Yasemin Erguvan (@yaseminerguvan)
- Statement
- GlogauAIR Project
- CV
- Gallery
- More
Statement
Carlos Pesudo is a visual artist from Spain, currently based in Madrid. His work evokes ambiguity and unease. His visual research has led to a complex interplay of forms and registers—gestural, expressive, yet also subtle and delicate paintings that unfold through a balance of action and restraint. His work exists in a constant state of tension, with images that linger on an undefined threshold between abstraction and figuration.
In the studio, Carlos works intuitively, seeking out unexpected and unsettling forms. For him, the canvas is an unknown space—one that reveals itself only through the act of painting. It is a process of summoning an image and a sensation not yet known.
The artist’s approach to image-making challenges traditional codes of representation. The ambiguity within his paintings invites viewers to question what they are seeing. The scenes that emerge—dynamic and theatrical—feel both strange and familiar, revealing, almost unintentionally, his fascination with certain forms in nature, particularly those that strike him as violent or illogical.
GlogauAIR Project
Drift and Collapse
This still-undefined proposal draws inspiration from forms found in nature and the environment at large—particularly those that appear strange, violent, or illogical. It will focus on the underlying relationship between my personal language of abstraction and certain as-yet-undetermined elements from both the city and the natural world, including vegetation, insects, arachnids, and other invertebrates. This relationship will ultimately be shaped by the specific environment in which the project takes place—the in situ experience—which will define the execution and final nature of the work.
The project consists of paintings and a short video art piece, and stems from the conceptualization of a new series I have recently begun to develop, titled Drift and Collapse. In this series, subtlety is intertwined with disruptive form, proposing a play of perspectives and tensions, suspended within delicate spaces. These are paintings developed through various processes and layers, as if they were ecosystems, where multiple visual languages interlock, generating a process of transformation within the painting itself.
Drift is understood as an accumulative and ongoing process of gradual change. In this process, each layer, each gesture or detail, acts as a small trace of that constant transformation. Drift advances subtly, creating a sense of movement that is almost imperceptible. However, this process of transformation reaches a limit in collapse.
Collapse represents that critical moment when a system loses its stability, and its structure either disintegrates or abruptly transforms. It is an act of redefinition, where what once seemed stable and cohesive becomes distorted, giving way to a new form of dissonance within the work. This tension between the gradual and the abrupt—between the softness of drift and the rupture of collapse—is what animates the aesthetic proposal of the series.
Drift and Collapse is also a process of searching, one inherent to every creative act—a search for something unknown, which ultimately culminates in the random. Drift is understood here as that indirect pursuit of randomness, the process that precedes the moment of encountering something.
CV
Education
- 2016-2018 Master in Artistic Production. Fine Arts Faculty San Carlos (UPV), Valencia (Spain).
- 2018 Fine Arts Faculty of Bahía (UFBA), Salvador de Bahia (Brasil).
- 2012-2016 Fine Arts Faculty, (UPV) Fine Arts Faculty San Carlos, Valencia (Spain).
- 2014-2015 The Hungarian University of Fine Arts – Magyar Képzőművészeti Egyetem (MKE), Budapest (Hungary).
Solo exhibition
- 2025 Deriva y colapso, Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2024 El guateque, Yusto Giner Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2022 Este cuadro me mira raro, Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2021 Zero space, Kevin Kavanagh Gallery, Dublín (Ireland).
- 2021 OVO, Yusto Giner Gallery, Marbella (Spain).
- 2021 It doesn’t belong to us, SomoS Arthouse, Berlin (Germany).
- 2020 Espacio Cero. Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2019 ¿Quién pagará el pato?. Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2019 MARTE Contemporary Art Fair – Awarded as emerging artist – Premio Marte Castellón. Castellón (Spain).
- 2017 Vanitas Vanitatum, PRÁM Gallery, Prague (Czech Republic).
Colective exhibitions
- 2025 Urvanity Art Fair, Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2024 Los Mellizos, Herrero de tejada Gallery, in the exhibition space “Tha house”, Madrid.
- 2024 Estampa Art Fair, Galería Yusto Giner, Madrid.
- 2024 La invitación(with artists: Michael Swaney, Guillermo Pfaff, Tracey Slater, Julia Santaolalla, Miguel Marina, Narowé, Eloy Arribas, Marie-Cécile Aptel, Max Kesterloot, Amaya Suberviola, Chiaohan Chueh, Julián Cruz, Maillo, and María Tinaut.) Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2023 Zona Maco, Yusto Giner Gallery, Mexico City (México).
- 2023 Shoot speed / kill light(with artists: Cristina de Miguel, Austin Lee, Marria Prats, Mie Olise, Jana Schröder, Kotie Paloma, Renee Estee, Loren Erdrich, Eloy Arribas and Maillo), Herrero de Tejada Gallery in collaboration with Urvanity Art Fair, Madrid (Spain).
- 2023 Urvanity Art Fair, Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2023 Estampa Art Fair, Herrero de tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2022 Art Brussels, Filomena Soares Gallery, Brussels (Belgium).
- 2022 Urvanity Art Fair, Yusto Giner Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2021 Estampa Art Fair, Yusto Giner Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2021 Estampa Art Fair, Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2021 Estampa Art Fair (Postponed 2020 edition) Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2020 JustMad Contemporary Art Fair, Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2019 FIN (de la cuarta parte), Herrero de Tejada Gallery, Madrid (Spain).
- 2017 Mapa y Cultura. Collblanc Espai d’Art Gallery. Culla (Spain).
- 2015 Spaces of uncertainty, KRAKERS, Krakow (Poland).
Awards
- 2023 Acquisition prize Kells Collection, Urvanity Art Fair, Madrid (Spain).
- 2020 Grant by the Foundation Davalos Fletcher. Castellón (Spain).
- 2019 MARTE Contemporary Art Fair – Awarded as emerging artist – Premio Marte Castellón. Castellón (Spain).
- 2017 Honourable mention on a video-art projection, Biennal Ciutat Vella Oberta 2017. IVAM Lab. Valencia (Spain).
Artistic Residencies
- 2025 Summer residency-Absract Mag, Chateau de forbin, Marsella.
- 2022 Residencia Nautilus, Lanzarote (Spain).
- 2021 SomoS, Berlín (Germany).
- 2019 Centre d’Art La Rectoría. Barcelona (Spain).
- 2017 PRÁM. Prague (Czeck Republic).
- 2017 Culla Contemporánea, by Collblanc Espai d’Art Gallery, Castellón (Spain).
Collections and Museums
- Kells Collection.
- John Márquez Foundation.
- Papartus Collection.
- Aldebarán Collection.
- Casa de indias Collection.
- Teresa Calvo collection.
- Castellón City Museum (Spain).
- Goverment of Castellón, Diputación de Castellón (Spain).
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